
Michael Flecker Miscellaneous Artefacts Identifications and Implications Michael Flecker Miscellaneous Artefacts Identifications and Implications he wide ranging scholarly research presented Apart from identifying each artefact and dis- Tin this volume has led to the conclusion that cussing its function, we set out to discover more an Arab or Indian ship loaded a full cargo in a of the Belitung ship’s movements and crew Chinese port, then sank in Indonesian waters through the context of these finds on the wreck while voyaging back to the western reaches of site. With this in mind, it is worth summarising the Indian Ocean. But the question of whether it the likely provenance of each artefact. called, or planned to call, at an Indonesian port remains open, as does the question of who exact- Origin Artefact ly constituted the crew of this ship. The answers China Cymbal (no. 305) will never be clear, but it is the miscellaneous Inkstone (no. 309) artefacts that may provide the best clues. Die (no. 311) Lacquer dish (no. 312) The author had the opportunity to briefly exam- Needle (no. 313) ine several of these artefacts as they came to the Spoons (no. 317, 318 a, b) surface during the second season of excavation, Sword handle (no. 325) although at that time some of the features were Tweezers (no. 326) obscured by corrosion and/or marine encrusta- Southeast Asia Scale weights (no. 300 a–c) tion. This report is largely based on photographic Scale bar (no. 301) material, and composition assumptions made by Grindstone and roller the conservator. Chemical component analysis of (no. 302) the artefacts has not been undertaken, partly be- Aromatic resin (no. 322) cause such analysis might have been destructive. Several artefacts remain unidentified, but others These one-off type artefacts are not trade goods. have been found to be important discoveries, as They are ship’s equipment or items belong to artefacts in themselves, as well as in the overall members of the crew or accompanying mer- context of the Belitung wreck. chants. The fact that most of the artefacts are 658 Miscellaneous Artefacts Chinese in origin comes as no surprise given that a call. Furthermore, having crossed the northern the ship loaded a full cargo in China. Perhaps reaches of the Indian Ocean and traversed Ma- Arab or Indian members of the crew developed lacca Strait it is more than likely that the ship a taste for Chinese things. Some could have been would stop to resupply, if not to trade. in China for many years, as there were large populations from both nations living at the main If such a stopover was made, there may well have trading ports (see above p. 61). Then again, there been a replenishment of crew as well. The crew is a reasonable chance that at least one Chinese losses suffered during voyages made by European merchant embarked on the voyage, and took his vessels many centuries later were extreme. While personal possessions with him. the journey from the western Indian Ocean to Southeast Asia or China is considerably shorter, The glass bottle no. 319 with a possible Middle there was still ample opportunity for decline Eastern origin has not been included in the table, through disease, malnutrition, battle, and acci- for the possibility is not sufficiently high. Given dent. Just as the Europeans did in later times, the the origin of the ship, it is indeed surprising that Arabs or Indians could have taken on Southeast the only definitively Arab or Indian artefacts on Asian crew to make up the numbers. Likewise, board are two turquoise-glazed amphoras (nos they could have taken on Southeast Asian pilots 292, 293). with a sound knowledge of local waters, and per- haps of the entire route north. Of primary interest, however, are the artefacts of Southeast Asian provenance. They strongly The conclusion must always remain tentative, imply that the ship either called at a Southeast but intense interaction is likely to have occurred Asian port on the way to China, or that it had throughout the voyage between the western In- done so on the return trip, before being wrecked. dian Ocean and China. A stopover in Southeast Certainly Palembang was a major entrepot port Asia, most likely in Sumatra, is probable (cf. at the time, and the powerful Srivijayan navy above p. 153). A mixed crew is just as likely. ensured that the majority of passing ships made Miscellaneous Artefacts 659 300 a–c Scale weights 9th century Copper alloy Southeast Asia No. 300 a: Ht. 1.8 cm, diam. 3.8 cm, weight 147.98 g No. 300 b: Ht. 1.8 cm, diam. 4.0 cm, weight 151.64 g No. 300 c: Ht. 1.9 cm, diam. 3.6 cm, weight 105.73 g Three scale weights were recovered from the Belitung wreck, with metallic inserts on both sides. The Java Sea wreck was all made from a copper alloy. They are in the shape of a thick probably also an Indonesian lash-lugged craft, but in this circular disk, two with well rounded sides and the third with a instance, one that was returning to Java having loaded a full sharply angular hexagonal cross-section. The angular weight cargo of iron and ceramics in China. has a hole drilled out of one side. The hole was presumably used to adjust the weight to the official standard. The three weights from the Belitung wreck weigh 105.7, 148.0, and 151.6 g. The small weight discrepancy between the This find is particularly interesting for it is the third instance latter two may be accounted for by differential corrosion, so of scale weights being recovered from ancient shipwrecks they should be considered to be of the same weight category. in Indonesian waters, and each site is very different. A total From their shape, which is identical to the Intan weights, and of forty-four scale weights were recovered from the tenth- from their weight there is a very good chance that the Be- century Intan wreck,1 most likely an Indonesian lash-lugged litung wreck weights are also of Indonesian origin. craft trading between the Srivijayan port of Palembang and a port in central or eastern Java. Of these, twenty-four were An inscription on a silver umbrella that adorned a temple made of a copper alloy, seven were made of a tin alloy (prob- statue in the central Javanese state of Mataram is the earli- ably of tin and lead), and thirteen were made of stone, usu- est mention of a system of weights and values in Indonesia. ally quartz or marble. Many of the copper alloy weights had It has been dated to 843, and gives the weight of the silver holes drilled out of both sides, which were usually filled with in the umbrella as 1 kati.3 Four of the five gold bowls in the a slightly different copper alloy. From the precise and flush fit Wonoboyo find in central Java also bear inscriptions stating of the inserts it is likely that the metal was cast directly into their weight.4 This information, used in conjunction with the drilled holes. If the holes were completely filled the exercise standard weight of the most common coins in circulation in would be pointless as there would be no weight change. It Java in the ninth century (the silver 1 masa coin), has made is therefore probable that the inserts are plugs covering a the determination of the metric equivalents of the ancient hollow. These weights are thought to be of Indonesian prov- Javanese weights system possible:5 enance. 1 kati = 20 tahil = 750 to 768 g From the thirteenth-century Java Sea wreck2 fourteen scale 1 tahil = 1 suwarna = 1 dharana = 16 masa = 38 g weights were recovered; twelve of copper alloy, and two of 1 masa = 4 kupang = 2.4 g stone. Some of the metal weights had a scalloped decoration 1 kupang = 6 saga = 0.6 g around their circumference. The stone weights had holes 1 saga = 0.1 g 1 Flecker 2002, 67. 2 Mathers and Flecker 1997, 81. 3 Wisseman Christie 1996, 256. 4 These are on display in the Museum Nasional in Jakarta and are thought to date to before 929. The heaviest bears the inscription ‘1 kati’ and weighs about 750 g. The other weights are ‘15 suwarna, 1 masa, 1 kupang’ (about 600 g), ‘14 suwarna, 15 masa, 3 saga’ (585 g), and ‘4 suwarna, 15 masa’ (197 g): Wisseman Christie 1996, 257. 5 Ibid., 259–261. 660 Miscellaneous Artefacts / Catalogue No. 300 a–c (left to right) Wicks is far more precise with his determination, stating It is more difficult to determine whether the weights fit into that 1 suwarna is 38.601 g, 1 masa is 2.412 g, and 1 kupang is any Indian weight system. As noted in Gabriel Ferrand’s 0.603 g.6 Wisseman Christie assigns the tahil 38.4 g and the book of 1921 on weights, measures, and currencies used in kati 768 g.7 However, Wisseman Christie points out that, at the southern seas from the fourteenth to seventeenth century least for the weight of coins of the period, the margin of error (Les poids, mésures et monnaies des mers du Sud aux XIVème is in the order of five per cent.8 This margin of error is con- et XVIIème siecles), Indian weights varied markedly from re- sistent with the weights recovered from the shipwrecks, and gion to region. The weight system also depended on the com- even those listed by Wicks as being found in central Java.9 modity to be weighed and even the origin of the commodity.
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